Nothing Left to Lose: Political Inequality and Conflict Recurrence

What are the causes of conflict recurrence in states recently coming out of a civil
war? Various theories focus on how the conflict ends, the development issues the
states faces post-war, or the effect of a third-party intervention as the prime factors
leading to a stable peace or renewed violence. However, very little work has been
done to measure the effect that achieving a group’s goals has on their likelihood
to return to war. Following in the grievance-based argument for conflict onset, wherein
the horizontal inequalities – the inequalities across groups – lead to conflict, this
thesis focuses on what happens after the fighting has stopped and groups evaluate
how they fared from the conflict. Groups which are historically and continually excluded
from political decision-making may see conflict as their only means of addressing
the grievances that remain post-civil war. Conflicts can also cause groups to lose
their political status that the group may view as unfair; they may see conflict as
the best means to regain their former position. While the theory holds that these
groups will seek renewed conflict to address their concerns, the empirical data suggests
that political grievances may have little to do with why states witness new episodes
of fighting. Utilizing the Ethnic Power Relations Dataset, this analysis shows that
the economic development level and the greater number of peace years post-conflict
have a far greater influence on whether there is renewed fighting than unaddressed
or new grievances. The following research highlights that while the literature may
point to political grievances as having a strong influence on the outset of an initial
conflict, such grievances may not be enough to push groups to once again return to
war.